Ketamine does not produce relief of neuropathic pain in mice lacking the β-common receptor (CD131).
Swartjes. Maarten M; Niesters. Marieke M; Heij. Lara L; Dunne. Ann A; Aarts. Leon L; Hand. Carla Cerami CC; Kim. Hyung-Suk HS; Brines. Michael M; Cerami. Anthony A; Dahan. Albert A
Key Findings
- Ketamine and ARA290 both reduce neuropathic pain in normal mice, but not in mice lacking the IRR (β‑common receptor).
- Ketamine provides strong short‑term pain relief but also causes psychomotor side effects; ARA290 does not cause these side effects.
- Both drugs lower expression of pain‑related genes (NMDAR, microglia, astrocytes, CCL2) in normal mice, indicating a shared downstream effect.
Practical Outcomes
- For DIY health enthusiasts, this study suggests that ketamine’s long‑lasting pain relief may depend on a receptor not directly targeted by its known NMDA‑blocking action. While the findings aren’t ready for human use, they hint that compounds like ARA290 that specifically activate the IRR could become a safer alternative for neuropathic pain, pending further research.
Summary
In mice, both ketamine and the peptide ARA290 can ease nerve‑pain, but they only work if a specific receptor called the innate repair receptor (IRR) is present. When that receptor is missing, neither drug helps with chronic pain, although ketamine still makes mice less sensitive to regular pain and causes noticeable side effects. ARA290, on the other hand, doesn’t cause those side effects.
Abstract
Neuropathic pain (NP) is a debilitating condition associated with traumatic, metabolic, autoimmune and neurological etiologies. Although the triggers for NP are diverse, there are common underlying pathways, including activation of immune cells in the spinal cord and up-regulation of the N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor (NMDAR). Ketamine, a well-known NDMAR antagonist, reduces neuropathic pain in a sustained manner. Recent study has shown that the novel 11-amino acid peptide erythropoietin derivative ARA290 produces a similar, long-lasting relief of NP. Here, we show that both drugs also have similar effects on the expression of mRNA of the NMDAR, as well as that of microglia, astrocytes and chemokine (C-C motif) ligand 2, all-important contributors to the development of NP. Although the effects of ketamine and ARA 290 on NP and its molecular mediators suggest a common mechanism of action, ARA 290 has no affinity for the NMDAR and acts specifically via the innate repair receptor (IRR) involved in tissue protection. We speculated therefore, that the IRR might be critically involved in the action of ketamine on neuropathic pain. To evaluate this, we studied the effects of ketamine and ARA 290 on acute pain, side effects, and allodynia following a spared nerve injury model in mice lacking the β-common receptor (βcR), a structural component of the IRR. Ketamine (50 mg/kg) and ARA 290 (30 µg/kg) produced divergent effects on acute pain: ketamine produced profound antinociception accompanied with psychomotor side effects, but ARA290 did not, in both normal and knock out mice. In contrast, while both drugs were antiallodynic in WT mice, they had no effect on NP in mice lacking the βcR. Together, these results show that an intact IRR is required for the effective treatment of NP with either ketamine or ARA 290, but is not involved in ketamine's analgesic and side effects.
Study Information
pubmed
2013
2013-08-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.1371/journal.pone.0071326
25
37